| obidankenobi ( @ 2009-11-05 05:43:00 |
| Entry tags: | battletech, behind the scenes, radio over moscow, recording |
Behind the Scenes #4 - Pakistan
PAKISTAN
I say in the blurbs (and soon, hopefully, the interviews) I’m heavily influenced by Nirvana, yet no one seems to get it. People hear drum machines and think it’s synthpop, and/or hear distorted guitars and assume because they’re accompanied by drum machines, it’s Nine Inch Nails I’m ripping off.
Whilst both assumptions aren’t entirely false, I think it’s a little lazy to write off just how much an effect Kurt Cobain’s songwriting has had on me.
The first album I ever bought was Nirvana, Unplugged in New York. I’m not sure there’s a cooler album for someone my age to have begun with; I suppose I was a late starter, being 14 at the time, but I was doing alright for a fan of Australian rugby league who switched his allegiance from balls (balls) to penis substitutes (guitars) almost overnight.
I remember sitting in my mate’s garage when we were 15 (he’d been kicked out of home, and moved to the garage - it sounds lame, I know, but when you were 15, in 1995, the fact he was allowed topless (not full-frontal) pics on his wall, simply because he was no longer in the house, was pretty awesome), listening to Nirvana pretty much non-stop.
It was the same at home - mum once came into my room, and asked: ‘Do you like any other bands, apart from Nirvana?’ I thought about it for a few seconds, and replied, ‘No.’ Obviously.
A few months later I’d jump on the whole mid-90s Britpop/Beatles wave, but anyway, years later…
I’d learned a bit about using semitone discordance from Placebo, using single-string riffs from Muse, yet still loved the basic, ‘happy’ C-F-G power-chord progressions of your everyday Weezer song… and one day in early 2004 hit upon the main riff. I used the fact the riff - based in E - landed on C, giving it that minor kind of sound, to switch to F-C-G in the choruses, but keeping an angry melody, and somehow it resulted in something that was simultaneously catchy as hell, without being a total cheese-fest.
That sounds totally nerdy, but I insist - I have absolutely no musical training or knowledge, honest. It just sounded right.
The first time it was played live in my band at the time, Vetox, was the drummer’s… something. Engagement party? It was an odd audience anyway, and he hadn’t been in the band long, but it was draining, which yeah, made me think there was something to the song.
And as for the parts everyone says sound like the Killers, a) I’m actually quite proud I managed to pull off a song that equally ripped off Nirvana and the Killers, and b) one review said instead it was White Zombie I was channeling. Which you cannot argue with, or Rob Zombie will kill you, or something.
The recording obviously uses a lo-fi approximation of Muse’s Chris Wolstenholme’s distorted basswork, and if you listen carefully - it’s more apparent on the dynamic, alternate mix - drum machines in the intro and from the second verse onwards.
If you’ve read this far, you might even be interested in what the song is about - well, it’s a clumsily-written simplified view of what Pakistan, the country, seemingly wants from the United States. Crossed with wanting a girl. Heavy shit. This is where I insert the ‘in a post-9/11 world’ quote to get people’s ears on fire, I think.
LINK: DOWNLOAD ‘PAKISTAN’
Mirrored from Radio Over Moscow.